(01-12-2018, 06:39 AM)Kall Wrote: One more question: my Asshat Doctor basically told me that I have sleep apnea because I am overweight (he has a massive beer belly). I was under the impression that it was due to my chin being receding. I’m sure that being overweight doesn’t help. I recently went off Prednisone I was taking for my Chiari inflammation, which caused my face and neck to balloon and messed up my blood sugar.. so I currently have balloon face. I’ve probably had sleep apnea for over 20 years as I know I’ve struggled to breathe when laying on a flat bed with only one pillow. My point is that it has more to do with weight.
Hi Kall. welcome to the forum.
Receding chin, big neck, shape of the back of the throat, narrow restricted neck, large tongue, and being overweight does not help things.
Weight is part of the problem, but I know a guy that is huge, and I do mean huge! He does not have sleep apnea. I also know a guy that is very thin, he has sleep apnea (or should I say did have as he passed away) he had it so bad he had to stop working for a while as he himself had patients he was dealing with day to day and couldn't concentrate. It took them a while to diagnose him as no one thought he could have sleep apnea being so thin.
So it is not all down to weight issues and there can be one or more issues can come into play. A lot of sufferers tend to be overweight, but by no means all sufferers are. I know of a young boy that has sleep apnea, to look at him you would never think there was anything wrong with him to cause sleep apnea, but he has it. When his mother kept complaining he was always tired to the doctor the doctor couldn't find anything wrong with him. It was a doctor that had just gone through training and was working there for a short while to gain experience that took the time to get to know the boy. He checked him over and asked his mother to take him in every day so he could see how he was. It was only after a while he noticed that the boy was always tired and sluggish that he suggested it might be sleep apnea. The other doctors said that he dd not fit the profile, but the doctor arranged for him to go to the sleep clinic for a sleep study and was found to be quite bad. It was not even straight forward sleep apnea, he had to get a machine that would make him breath when he stopped breathing, he also breathed very shallow breaths when he was asleep at times.
Since he got the diagnoses, he has got his energy back and can concentrate at school, in fact he turned out to be quite clever and has caught up with the others and is doing very well. His mother thinks he wants to go into electrical or electromagnetically engineering or software writing.
I did notice that when I had a nasal mask it did hurt my teeth at the top, this was with the mask not all that tight. I think I could have found a better fitting mask that would have been fine. I went on to Nasal Pillows which cured the problem with the teeth.
A few people might have problems, the majority will not have any problems.
I could understand that if the mask was tightened up to much it might give you problems.
I can understand how MAD devices could give people problems though, they can be hard to use without a bit of discomfort.
I think as for a trying to build a case against a doctor and proving it has caused you pain and damage to your teeth might be very difficult to say the least.